The tacit confidentiality and general goodwill of the diplomatic circuit underpin a unique platform where international problems are solved. However, even seasoned diplomats are prone to the occasional offhand comment that, when exposed, may upset some other individuals or groups. Such gaffes abound in history: during the post-World War I negotiations in Paris in 1919, racially-disparaging comments made by then-French leader Jacques Clemenceau towards Japanese representatives are said to have contributed to the beginning of Japan’s subsequent isolation from an international stage where its views and ambitions were deemed inferior.

International dialogue today is not the preserve of trained diplomats; members of the executive and legislature, as well as political party activists, liaise with foreign officials daily, and sometimes the lines between national interest—improving socioeconomic stability and economic development—and narrow political interest—gaining or retaining power—are blurred. The latest Wikileaks documents chronicle comments made by some Ghanaian powerbrokers to American foreign officials on subjects ranging from intra-party politics to more serious issues of national security, some capable of upsetting the country’s political apple cart.

While it is true that public and party officials have a right to to free speech in their quest for power, these individuals are beholden to temper that right when they discuss potential issues of national security with supposedly neutral foreign officials. Sure, it is okay to think that the chairman of your party is young and immature, so there are plans to replace. And it is reasonable to opine that a certain religious or ethnic demography does not like your party despite your efforts to woo them. But these are assertions that tactful politicians are careful to make only to their political kinsmen. It is almost naïve to divulge sensitive political information to foreign officials whom one views as allies and not expect any negative consequences, especially when these comments are derogatory to certain individuals or groups in one’s own country.

The United States is an important friend to Ghana, and it is natural to feel safe in the company of friends. But America is an important friend to many other countries in the world, and American friendship is hinged on its own interests. During interaction with major powers, the broader national interests of smaller countries can be left vulnerable when the latter are represented by political players who seek to further parochial interests, so see it fit to denigrate opponents for little to no apparent gain, unwittingly compromising national peace.

Perhaps there is a net positive to Wikileaks’ putting these documents in the public domain. Now voters know which individuals were keen on overturning the results of the last elections. Maybe it is a favorable turn of events that ordinary Ghanaians are now privy to information about which politicians are ready to use any means, even violence and bribery, to win power. With fifteen months left until the next elections, significant sections of the country’s peace-loving and increasingly savvy electorate would find such knowledge useful.